Nov. 25, 2016 (GIN) – Africans were tweeting and messaging about the surprise outcome of U.S. elections last week that left many in the developing world worried for the future.

Kenyan-American and distinguished professor Makau Mutua was “quarterbacking” as a “day after” couch potato who second guesses why his team lost.

“Hillary Clinton was defeated by “white-lash”, as opposed to “white backlash”, he wrote, an opinion shared with CNN reporter Van Jones.

“A large segment of white American males has been angry ever since Barack Obama, a Kenyan-American, was elected the first black President of the United States in 2008,” he wrote in the Kenyan news Standard… “Trump’s campaign was founded on a textbook definition of racism, xenophobia, misogyny, and islamophobia.”

Speaking to the Voice of America, Ghanaian social activist Sara Asafu-Adjaye called it a missed opportunity for a first female U.S. president.

“Not only is it that she is a woman. She’s a competent woman,” said Asafu-Adjaye. “And that over 48 percent of Americans believe she’s not the better person for the job, scares me.”

Charles Eboune, an international relations expert in Cameroon, was dismayed that Clinton’s decades of experience in Washington couldn’t carry her to victory. “[The] majority is not always right,” Eboune told VOA.

While students and youth shared disappointment in the voting outcome, the African ruling elite was jubilant.

“(Trump’s) received congratulations from many African leaders, including those they call the sit-tight leaders, the overstayers, the dictators, the despots, the tyrants,” commented NPR reporter Ofeibia Quist-Arcton in Senegal.

“Some of Africa’s leaders, especially those who aren’t popular in their own home countries, are, if not rejoicing and jubilating that they’ve got President Obama and Hillary Clinton off their backs, are certainly saying ‘those who have been hectoring us about human rights, about gay rights, about all sorts of things are no longer going to be in Washington, so phew,’” she said.

As of this writing, eight African presidents have officially sent congratulations via their official twitter handles, starting with Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza, followed by Ghana’s John Dramani Mahama, who himself heads to the polls in December this year.

Zimbabwe’s information officer, Chris Mushowe, said the country was looking forward to Trump’s inauguration to rebuild relations.

Last but not least, Daily Show host Noah Trevor of South Africa riffed on the parallels between the end of apartheid and the historic election of President Barack Obama.

“Freedom is actually the beginning of the journey,” he told his audience at the Chicago Humanities Festival this week. “The hard work really begins when you achieve your goal.”